Given that Kyrou, Buch, Thomas, and Holloway are already core players, that point is pretty futile.
My point is that Stenberg needs to reach his absolute ceiling to get anywhere near being a core piece and not a core-adjacent piece. Because at least 3 of those guys are going to still be core pieces in the late 2020s and odds are very slim that Stenberg passes them on the depth chart.
You have come to the conversation penciling Stenberg in as a piece that the front office loves and won't trade because he is a core piece. My point is that he is far from a lock to be a core piece. There are at least two established 'core piece' wingers ahead of him on the depth chart. Three if Buch doesn't see decline earlier than the front office expects. As 'pure upside' goes, I think the organization is clearly higher on Snuggy.
How many wingers are part of a team's core? If we're talking about the way you have to develop a 'core player,' it is not futile to wonder if the player has any type of path to being a core player. I'm not sold that Stenberg does and that makes it less likely that the team will trade other core-adjacent wingers who are further along the development path to create opportunities for him.
Also, Stenberg has significantly higher upside than Neighbours. Jake never even played in the World Juniors, let alone lead his team in points there.
'Nothing a developing player does outside the WJC' is a stance we'll just have to agree to disagree on. Ignoring Neighbours' junior, AHL, and actual NHL production to say Stenberg has significantly higher upside is wild to me. Neighbours has exceeded my expectations, but he was a damn productive junior player and he's excelled at the pro level. The 27 NHL goals he scored last year is more goals than Stenberg has scored across all levels in the 2 years since we drafted him.
Perceived upside or not, he (and Bolduc) both have significant head starts over Stenberg in getting themselves into the 'next' core. Both are scoring more in the NHL than Stenberg is scoring outside the NHL. This team is going to be pretty fully in 'winning' mode by the time Stenberg is potentially ready to make the jump into the top 9. And barring a player or two busting in front of him, the team will very likely have no interest in trading a young top 9 player to make the team worse for that season in order to prioritize Stenberg's development.
While a trade could happen, I think it is just as likely that the team strongarms a few guys into bridge deals to run 4 damn good lines instead of a traditional banger 4th line. That is becoming more and more popular around the league.
Lastly, how many games did Jaden Schwartz play on the fourth line? An entire season? Nope. Leaving Stenberg on the 4th line for an indefinite period of time while refusing to trade any of the aformentioned players is a disservice to Otto, and I'd expect him to share some of the same feelings Holloway had when he was in Edmonton. Time will tell how good Stenberg is, but this team will have a forward surplus problem as early as 12-18 months, and I'm forewarning anyone here with strong attachments to our young prospects that they may realistically be moved within 24 months. That's the business of sports.
Schwartz averaged 12:28 a night over his first full NHL season (which was his 2nd stint in the NHL after a cup of coffee after his sophomore season) and started moving up the lineup when his play earned it (and injuries created space). I don't believe anyone has said that Stenberg shouldn't be able to force his way up the lineup. But there is a very good chance that his potential ascension takes more time (like Barby's) and demands that he be opportunistic rather than the organization trading a (at-the-time) better young player to gift him the role.